Prime Power and Prime Product Distance Graphs
Abstract
A graph G is a k-prime product distance graph if its vertices can be labeled with distinct integers such that for any two adjacent vertices, the difference of their labels is the product of at most k primes. A graph has prime product number ppn(G)=k if it is a k-prime product graph but not a (k-1)-prime product graph. Similarly, G is a prime kth-power graph (respectively, strict prime kth-power graph) if its vertices can be labeled with distinct integers such that for any two adjacent vertices, the difference of their labels is the jth power of a prime, for j ≤ k (respectively, the kth power of a prime exactly). We prove that ppn(Kn) = 2(n) - 1, and for a nonempty k-chromatic graph G, ppn(G) = 2(k) - 1 or ppn(G) = 2(k). We determine ppn(G) for all complete bipartite, 3-partite, and 4-partite graphs. We prove that Kn is a prime kth-power graph if and only if n < 7, and we determine conditions on cycles and outerplanar graphs G for which G is a strict prime kth-power graph. We find connections between prime product and prime power distance graphs and the Twin Prime Conjecture, the Green-Tao Theorem, and Fermat's Last Theorem.
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